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Batman Begins - 1 Disc EditionBatman Begins discards the previous four films in the series and recasts the Caped Crusader as a fearsome avenging angel. That's good news, because the series, which had gotten off to a rousing start under Tim Burton, had gradually dissolved into self-parody by 1997's Batman & Robin. As the title implies, Batman Begins tells the story anew, when Bruce Wayne (Christian Bale) flees Western civilization following the murder of his parents. He is taken in by a mysterious instructor named Ducard (Liam Neeson in another mentor role) and urged to become a ninja in the League of Shadows, but he instead returns to his native Gotham City resolved to end the mob rule that is strangling it. But are there forces even more sinister at hand?
Co-written by the team of David S. Goyer (a veteran comic book writer) and director Christopher Nolan (Memento), Batman Begins is a welcome return to the grim and gritty version of the Dark Knight, owing a great debt to the graphic novels that preceded it. It doesn't have the razzle dazzle, or the mass appeal, of Spider-Man 2 (though the Batmobile is cool), and retelling the origin means it starts slowly, like most "first" superhero movies. But it's certainly the best Bat-film since Burton's original, and one of the best superhero movies of its time. Bale cuts a good figure as Batman, intense and dangerous but with some of the lightheartedness Michael Keaton brought to the character. Michael Caine provides much of the film's humor as the family butler, Alfred, and as the love interest, Katie Holmes (Dawson's Creek) is surprisingly believable in her first adult role. Also featuring Gary Oldman as the young police officer Jim Gordon, Morgan Freeman as a Q-like gadgets expert, and Cillian Murphy as the vile Jonathan Crane. --David Horiuchi, Amazon.com ... Read More » |
| Average User Rating: 80% | |
| 5 / 5 | Dark Was The Young Knight
"robnorw" - 25 August 2005 Near the big-bang finish of ''Batman Begins,'' the title avenger, played by the charismatic young British actor Christian Bale, scoops up a damsel in distress, played by Katie Holmes, and spirits her away to his lair. Watching this scene, it was hard not to think how nice it would have been if Batman had instead dispatched the infernally perky actress, whose recent off-screen antics have threatened to eclipse this unexpectedly good movie. As it happens, the most memorable rescue mission in ''Batman Begins'' isn't engineered by the caped crusader, but by the film's director, Christopher Nolan. ''Batman Begins'' is the seventh live-action film to take on the comic-book legend and the first to usher it into the kingdom of movie myth. Conceived in the shadow of American pop rather than in its bright light, this tense, effective iteration of Bob Kane's original comic book owes its power and pleasures to a director who takes his material seriously and to a star who shoulders that seriousness with ease. Until now, Mr. Bale, who cut his teeth working with Steven Spielberg on ''Empire of the Sun'' almost two decades ago, has been best known for his scarily plausible performance in ''American Psycho,'' an intellectual horror movie that now seems like a prelude to this one: think American Psycho redux, this time in tights. As sleek as a panther, with cheekbones that look sharp enough to give even an ardent lover pause, Mr. Bale makes a superbly menacing avenger. His Batman is leagues away from Adam West's cartoony persona, which lumbered across American television screens in the mid- and late-60's with zap and pow, but never an ounce of real wow. Mr. Bale even improves on Michael Keaton, who donned Batman's cape both in Tim Burton's 1989 ''Batman'' and its funhouse sequel three years later, and gave the character a jolt of menace. What Mr. Keaton couldn't bring to the role, and what Mr. Bale conveys effortlessly, is Bruce Wayne's air of casual entitlement, the aristocratic hauteur that is the necessary complement of Batman's obsessive megalomania. What Mr. Nolan gets, and gets better than any other previous director, is that without Bruce Wayne, Batman is just a rich wacko with illusions of grandeur and a terrific pair of support hose. Without his suave alter ego, this weird bat man is a superhero without humanity, an avenger without a conscious, an id without a superego. Which is why, working from his and David S. Goyer's very fine screenplay, Mr. Nolan more or less begins at the beginning, taking Batman back to his original trauma and the death of his parents. With narrative economy and tangible feeling, he stages that terrible, defining moment when young Master Wayne watched a criminal shoot his parents to death in a Gotham City alley, thereby setting into motion his long, strange journey into the self. The story opens with the adult Bruce in the middle of that journey, in the far reaches of Asia, where he first rubs shoulders with ''the criminal fraternity,'' then a clandestine brotherhood called the League of Shadows. Lead by a warrior sensei, Ra's al Ghul (Ken Watanabe), and his aide, Henri Ducard (Liam Neeson, at his lethal best), the league invites Bruce into its fold, an offer he violently declines. Thereafter, he returns to Gotham City, where he assumes a dual identity as both the city's wealthiest citizen and its avenging angel. Intrigue ensues involving a crime lord played with brio by Tom Wilkinson, a headshrinker brought to skin-crawling life by Cillian Murphy and the last honest cop in Gotham, James Gordon, given expressive poignancy by a restrained Gary Oldman. It's amazing what an excellent cast, a solid screenplay and a regard for the source material can do for a comic book movie. Unlike Robert Rodriguez, whose faithfulness to Frank Miller's comic sucked the juice out of ''Sin City,'' Mr. Nolan approaches Batman with respect rather than reverence. It's obvious that Mr. Nolan has made a close study of the Batman legacy, but he owes a specific debt to Mr. Miller's 1980's rethink of the character, which resurrected the Dark Knight side of his identity. Like Mr. Miller's Batman, Mr. Nolan's is tormented by demons both physical and psychological. In an uncertain world, one the director models with an eye to our own, this is a hero caught between justice and vengeance, a desire for peace and the will to power. That struggle gives the story its requisite heft, but what makes this ''Batman'' so enjoyable is how Mr. Nolan balances the story's dark elements with its light, and arranges the familiar genre elements in new, unforeseen ways. Weaned on countless comics and a handful of movies, we may think we know the bat cave like we know the inside of our childhood bedroom. But to watch Bruce Wayne stand in the atmospheric gloom of this new cavern, surrounded by a cloud of swirling bats, is to see the underground refuge for the first time. Likewise the Batmobile, which here resembles a Hummer that looks as if it had been gently flattened by a Bradley tank, then tricked out for some hard street racing with fat tires and gleaming black paint. As is often the case with movies about toys and boys, ''Batman Begins'' drags on too long, but even the reflexively Bruckheimer-like finish can't diminish its charms. Mr. Nolan needs to work on his action: Fred Astaire made sure that he was filmed so that you could see the entirety of his body, advice this director should have heeded when shooting his superhero. Still, what makes ''Batman Begins'' the most successful comic-book adaptation alongside Terry Zwigoff's ''Ghost World'' isn't the noisy set pieces, the nods to ''Blade Runner'' or the way a child's keepsake, an Indian arrowhead, echoes the shape of a bat. It's the way Mr. Nolan invites us to watch Bruce Wayne quietly piecing together his Batman identity, to become a secret sharer to a legend, just as we did once upon a time when we read our first comic. ... Read Full Review » |
| 5 / 5 | Time for a new Beginning...
"craighere" - 14 August 2005 In the summer of 1989, a Legend was born. Although Batman had already been around for decades, it was Tim Burton's original movie that introduced the general public to the Dark Knight that fans of the character had loved for so long. The Batman persona as percieved by the general public was still that of the "Pow! Wack! Bam!" Adam West days, but with this new movie Burton captured Batman's dark roots perfectly, and all but erased any ridiculous camp extravaganza of the 60's. The film was a huge success, but 3 sequels down the road, and the Bat slate was wiped clean, what with the Villains taking centre stage and the 'Colourful Camp Tea Party' making an un-welcome return by the 1997 film, 'Batman & Robin'. Audiences should be pleased then to know that the Dark nature of the Batman character that they embrazed so much back in '89 has returned, with Director Christopher Nolan treating the source material with the up-most respect. In Burton's original, The Joker asked "Where does he get those wonderful toys?..". Well now we know, not just Batman's origins are explored in Nolan's movie, but those of The Batmobile, the Bat-suit, and all Batman's other fantastic gadgets. For once Batman has a villain that, whilst almost as interesting as the Bat, does not over shadow our title character, with Bale putting in an admirable performance in both the roles of Batman and Bruce Wayne (something that was severly missing from Bat's other screen adventures) Michael Caine, Liam Neeson, Cillian Murphy and of course Morgan Freeman all put in stellar performances in roles that could have very easily overshadowed Mr. Bale; Again credit goes to Director Nolan for juggling all these stars. Wonderful story, rocket fast pace and thrilling chases join forces with Tremendous performances to make Batman Begins not just a great Batman movie, but a film that will definetly be remembered as something more than a "comic book flick"...... Read Full Review » |
| 5 / 5 | Bat-Re-Boot
B. Takhar "Movie Bob" (London, Uk) - 18 August 2005 Firstly: Batman Begins is not a prequel, it is a restart, pretend none of the movies happened. Second, joker does not kill Bruce Waynes Parents in the comics, they are killed by a nameless thug, later called Joe Chill. Batman Begins takes Batman back to its dark roots (after the campiness and neon infested euro trance/ dance that was batman forever and Batman and Robin) acclaimed director christoper Nolan promised a more realistic batman with the story driven by the main charcter rather than the villian. He also promised as a great story and villians. He said he'd be faithful to the comics. Chris Nolan Delivered just what he promised, a down to earth, dark, realistic movie, a batman movie, Not a Joel Shummacher camp original, not Burto-man, but Batman. This movie is possibly the smartest and best super hero movie so far. Not relying on special effects and CGI (like other super hero movies we know), rather, it relys on the charcters to drive the stroy forward, mainly Bruce Wayne/ Batman. Performances all around are good but Christian Bales really stands out. He grasps the idea of Batman, the persona, excellently. This is what a Batman movie should have always been. Its 12A super hero movie, But make no mistake, this is not a kids movie, its very smart and adult oriented, this is a scary batman, sadistic, even if he doesn't kill. And i havent even mentioned the extremely creepy ScareCrow, the (terrorist) organistion known as the league of shadows, the Crime Lord Falcone, and... that Car Chase. Theres one glitch, Katie Holmes, she is teriible in this movie and has some sort of side ways mouth syndrome, other than that, this movie is like watching the finished work of a master craftman, beautiful (in dark, bat-man-ish type of way, of course). What a reboot, of a failed, not very good in the first place, franchise. |
| 5 / 5 | Refreshingly Dark take on the Dark-Knight
U. A. Dar "intothevoid" (London, UK) - 16 August 2005 I would like to clarify a few things that apmalmighty has stated in his above review. Firstly Batman Begins DOES have a major bat-villain, and that is Ra's al Ghul, who is by Batman's own assesment (in the comic books) THE most dangerous villain he has ever come across!! Secondly the change from Bruce's parents being murdered by the Joker to a random homeless guy was welcome as this is the real story in the comic books. More specifically, in the comics he still does not know who killed his parents, but the impression readers are given is that it isn't any super-villain and was just another random theif. That clarified, i do agree i didnt like the batmobile. But other than that i absolutely loved the movie. Christian Bale does make a brilliant Bruce Wayne and Batman. Nolan's dark style also gives the movie the perfect touch and i can only hope the sequels continue in the same vain. ... Read Full Review » |
| 5 / 5 | 6 stars if i could - Buy It
- 16 August 2005 Batman as batman should be , he has the best batmobile a tank ( remember batman doesn't care about the look just what it can do) Practical costume and Gadgets batman deosn't have a yellow symbol and a large amount of weapons that will give him away when doing something stealth and he actually uses bats during the film . And he tells us how bats helpped him become batman .Better than the ones with micheal keaton |
£16.98
23 January 2006
£5.99 - £11.49